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Exchange rate

About: Exchange rate is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 47255 publications have been published within this topic receiving 944563 citations. The topic is also known as: foreign-exchange rate & forex rate.


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TL;DR: In this article, the role of real exchange rate misalignment on long-run growth for a set of ninety countries using time series data from 1980 to 2004 is investigated, and the results for the two-step System GMM panel growth models indicate that the coefficients for real exchange-rate mis-alignment are positive for different model specification and samples, which means that a more depreciated (appreciated) real-exchange rate helps (harms) long run growth.
Abstract: The paper investigates the role of real exchange rate misalignment on long-run growth for a set of ninety countries using time series data from 1980 to 2004. We first estimate a panel data model (using fixed and random effects) for the real exchange rate, with different model specifications, in order to produce estimates of the equilibrium real exchange rate and this is then used to construct measures of real exchange rate misalignment. We also provide an alternative set of estimates of real exchange rate misalignment using panel cointegration methods. The variables used in our real exchange rate models are: real per capita GDP; net foreign assets; terms of trade and government consumption. The results for the two-step System GMM panel growth models indicate that the coefficients for real exchange rate misalignment are positive for different model specification and samples, which means that a more depreciated (appreciated) real exchange rate helps (harms) long-run growth. The estimated coefficients are higher for developing and emerging countries.

170 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the link between devaluation, foreign interest payments, and the current acccount was incorporated into a fairly general macroeconomic model in which exchange rate changes influence aggregate demand through exports, imports, and expenditures as well as aggregate supply via the cost of imported factors of production.

169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors find empirical support for some of the factors that have been hypothesized in the literature, but not for others, including per capita incomes, bilateral distance, tariffs, country size, wages, longterm inflation, and long-term exchange rate variability.
Abstract: Developing countries traditionally experience pass-through of exchange rate changes that is greater and more rapid than high-income countries experience. This is true equally of the determination of prices of imported goods, prices of local competitors’ products, and the general CPI. But developing countries in the 1990s experienced a rapid downward trend in the degree of pass-through and speed of adjustment, more so than did high-income countries. As a consequence, slow and incomplete pass-through is no longer exclusively a luxury of industrial countries. Using a new data set—prices of eight narrowly defined brand commodities, observed in 76 countries—we find empirical support for some of the factors that have been hypothesized in the literature, but not for others. Significant determinants of the pass-through coefficient include per capita incomes, bilateral distance, tariffs, country size, wages, long-term inflation, and long-term exchange rate variability. Some of these factors changed during the 1990s. Part (and only part) of the downward trend in pass-through to imported goods prices, and in turn to competitors’ prices and the CPI, can be explained by changes in the monetary environment—including a fall in long-term inflation. Real wages work to reduce pass-through to competitors’ prices and the CPI, confirming the hypothesized role of distribution and retail costs in pricing to market. Rising distribution costs, due perhaps to the Balassa-Samuelson-Baumol effect, could contribute to the decline in the pass-through coefficient in some developing countries.

169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors construct model-free estimates of daily exchange rate volatility and correlation, covering an entire decade, using high-frequency data on Deutschemark and Yen returns against the dollar.
Abstract: Using high-frequency data on Deutschemark and Yen returns against the dollar, we construct model-free estimates of daily exchange rate volatility and correlation, covering an entire decade. Our estimates, termed realized volatilities and correlations, are not only model-free, but also approximately free of measurement error under general conditions, which we discuss in detail. Hence, for practical purposes, we may treat the exchange rate volatilities and correlations as observed rather than latent. We do so, and we characterize their joint distribution, both unconditionally and conditionally. Noteworthy results include a simple normality-inducing volatility transformation, high contemporaneous correlation across volatilities, high correlation between correlation and volatilities, pronounced and persistent dynamics in volatilities and correlations, evidence of long-memory dynamics in volatilities and correlations, and remarkably precise scaling laws under temporal aggregation.

169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article analyzed the behavior of exchange rates, reserves, and interest rates to assess whether there is evidence that country practice is moving toward corner solutions and found that countries that claim they are floating are indeed doing so.
Abstract: This note summarizes some of the highlights of my longer paper with Guillermo Calvo”Fear of Floating.” Many emerging market countries have suffered financial crises. One view blames soft pegs for these crises. Adherents to that view suggest that countries move to corner solutions--hard pegs or floating exchange rates. We analyze the behavior of exchange rates, reserves, and interest rates to assess whether there is evidence that country practice is moving toward corner solutions. We focus on whether countries that claim they are floating are indeed doing so. We find that countries that say they allow their exchange rate to float mostly do not--there seems to be an epidemic case of “fear of floating.”

169 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20242
2023899
20222,022
20211,295
20201,609
20191,767